Charge Recombination and Exciton Annihilation Reactions in

Publication Date (Web): December 4, 2009 ... Materials and Nanotechnology, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand. ,...
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Charge Recombination and Exciton Annihilation Reactions in Conjugated Polymer Blends Ian A. Howard,†,| Justin M. Hodgkiss,†,⊥ Xinping Zhang,†,# Kiril R. Kirov,† Hugo A. Bronstein,‡ Charlotte K. Williams,‡ Richard H. Friend,† Sebastian Westenhoff,*,†,§ and Neil C. Greenham† CaVendish Laboratory, J. J. Thomson AVenue, Cambridge CB3 0HE, United Kingdom, Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom, and Department of Chemistry, Biochemistry & Biophysics, UniVersity of Gothenburg, Box 462, 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden Received September 22, 2009; E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract: Bimolecular interactions between excitations in conjugated polymer thin films are important because they influence the efficiency of many optoelectronic devices that require high excitation densities. Using time-resolved optical spectroscopy, we measure the bimolecular interactions of charges, singlet excitons, and triplet excitons in intimately mixed polyfluorene blends with band-edge offsets optimized for photoinduced electron transfer. Bimolecular charge recombination and triplet-triplet annihilation are negligible, but exciton-charge interactions are efficient. The annihilation of singlet excitons by charges occurs on picosecond time-scales and reaches a rate equivalent to that of charge transfer. Triplet exciton annihilation by charges occurs on nanosecond time-scales. The surprising absence of nongeminate charge recombination is shown to be due to the limited mobility of charge carriers at the heterojunction. Therefore, extremely high densities of charge pairs can be maintained in the blend. The absence of triplet-triplet annihilation is a consequence of restricted triplet diffusion in the blend morphology. We suggest that the rate and nature of bimolecular interactions are determined by the stochastic excitation distribution in the polymer blend and the limited connectivity between the polymer domains. A model based on these assumptions quantitatively explains the effects. Our findings provide a comprehensive framework for understanding bimolecular recombination and annihilation processes in nanostructured materials.

1. Introduction

Bimolecular excitation dynamics influence the performance of organic optoelectronic devices that sustain high densities of excited states. In organic light-emitting diodes, including those utilizing long-lived phosphorescent dopants, exciton-exciton annihilation and exciton-charge annihilation are both significant loss mechanisms.1-4 The pursuit of electrically pumped organic lasing requires detailed understanding of various second-order loss mechanisms, including those that affect the population of precursor charge states, the emissive singlet states, and the losscausing triplet states.5–7 Light-emitting organic field-effect †

Cavendish Laboratory. Imperial College London. § University of Gothenburg. | Current affiliation: Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Ackermannweg 10, D-55128 Mainz, Germany. ⊥ Current affiliation: School and Chemical and Physical Sciences and the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, Victoria University of Wellington, P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand. # Current affiliation: College of Applied Sciences, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing 100022, People’s Republic of China. (1) Sebastian, R.; Karsten, W.; Karl, L. Phys. ReV. B 2007, 75, 125328. (2) Adachi, C.; Baldo, M. A.; Forrest, S. R. J. Appl. Phys. 2000, 87, 8049– 8055. (3) Nakanotani, H.; Sasabe, H.; Adachi, C. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2005, 86, 213506. (4) Staroske, W.; Pfeiffer, M.; Leo, K.; Hoffmann, M. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2007, 98, 197402. ‡

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transistors also require high charge and exciton densities within the emission zone, making bimolecular interactions likely.8,9 Understanding whether photogenerated charge carriers recombine nongeminately (bimolecularly)10-12 or geminately (monomolecularly)13-18 is crucial for the improvement of organic solar cells. Finally, bimolecular excitation dynamics do not only lead (5) Gartner, C.; Karnutsch, C.; Lemmer, U.; Pflumm, C. J. Appl. Phys. 2007, 101, 023107. (6) Denton, G. J.; Tessler, N.; Harrison, N. T.; Friend, R. H. Phys. ReV. Lett. 1997, 78, 733–736. (7) Baldo, M. A.; Holmes, R. J.; Forrest, S. R. Phys. ReV. B 2002, 66, 035321. (8) Hepp, A.; Heil, H.; Weise, W.; Ahles, M.; Schmechel, R.; von Seggern, H. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2003, 91, 157406. (9) Zaumseil, J.; Friend, R. H.; Sirringhaus, H. Nat. Mater. 2006, 5, 69– 74. (10) Nelson, J. Phys. ReV. B 2003, 67, 155209. (11) Montanari, I.; Nogueira, A. F.; Nelson, J.; Durrant, J. R.; Winder, C.; Loi, M. A.; Sariciftci, N. S.; Brabec, C. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2002, 81, 3001–3003. (12) Snaith, H. J.; Arias, A. C.; Morteani, A. C.; Silva, C.; Friend, R. H. Nano Lett. 2002, 2, 1353–1357. (13) Mihailetchi, V. D.; Koster, L. J. A.; Hummelen, J. C.; Blom, P. W. M. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2004, 93, 216601. (14) McNeill, C. R.; Westenhoff, S.; Groves, C.; Friend, R. H.; Greenham, N. C. J. Phys. Chem. C 2007, 111, 19153–19160. (15) Offermans, T.; Meskers, S. C. J.; Janssen, R. A. J. J. Chem. Phys. 2003, 119, 10924–10929. (16) De, S.; Pascher, T.; Maiti, M.; Jespersen, K. G.; Kesti, T.; Zhang, F. L.; Inganas, O.; Yartsev, A.; Sundstrom, V. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 8466–8472. 10.1021/ja908046h  2010 American Chemical Society

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to losses. Triplet-triplet annihilation has been exploited to realize optical up-conversion of low-energy photons,19-21 which could enhance the harvesting of low-energy sun light in future generations of organic photovoltaics. Today, many organic optoelectronic devices rely on sophisticated nanoscale architectures. Recent examples include organic single-molecule transistors,22 various systems comprising complex colloidal nanoparticle assemblies,23 and organic solar cells,24-26 which may have controlled mesoscale order.27-29 In all of these devices, excitations are confined on the length scale of a few nanometers; this will alter their effective diffusivity and consequently their bimolecular interactions. It is therefore important to study and understand these bimolecular reactions within nanostructured morphologies. In organic semiconductors, neutral excitations are generally considered to be tightly bound Frenkel excitons that may exist in the singlet or triplet manifold.30 Neutral excitations and charged species, which are also termed radicals or polarons, are stabilized by rearrangements of the underlying molecular structure. In noncrystalline thin films, they are therefore localized on chain segments and extend only over a few molecular units.31,32 Excitations may migrate between different chain segments,33 and bimolecular interactions are in general limited by their diffusion constants. The characteristic time-scales for exciton transfer are picoseconds for singlet excitons, where transport is primarily through long-range Fo¨rster-type transfer,34,35 and nanoseconds for charged and neutral triplet species, where only through-bond transfer is active.36 (17) Marsh, R. A.; Groves, C.; Greenham, N. C. J. Appl. Phys. 2007, 101, 083509. (18) Westenhoff, S.; Howard, I. A.; Hodgkiss, J. M.; Kirov, K. R.; Bronstein, H. A.; Williams, C. K.; Greenham, N. C.; Friend, R. H. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 13653–13658. (19) Islangulov, R. R.; Lott, J.; Weder, C.; Castellano, F. N. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 12652–12653. (20) Keivanidis, P. E.; Baluschev, S.; Miteva, T.; Nelles, G.; Scherf, U.; Yasuda, A.; Wegner, G. AdV. Mater. 2003, 15, 2095–2098. (21) Baluschev, S.; Yakutkin, V.; Miteva, T.; Wegner, G.; Roberts, T.; Nelles, G.; Yasuda, A.; Chernov, S.; Aleshchenkov, S.; Cheprakov, A. New J. Phys. 2008, 10, 013007. (22) Kubatkin, S.; Danilov, A.; Hjort, M.; Cornil, J.; Bredas, J.-L.; StuhrHansen, N.; Hedegard, P.; Bjornholm, T. Nature 2003, 425, 698– 701. (23) Kotov, N. A.; Stellacci, F. AdV. Mater. 2008, 20, 4221–4222. (24) Sariciftci, N. S.; Smilowitz, L.; Heeger, A. J.; Wudl, F. Science 1992, 258, 1474–1476. (25) Yu, G.; Gao, J.; Hummelen, J. C.; Wudl, F.; Heeger, A. J. Science 1995, 270, 1789–1791. (26) Halls, J. J. M.; Walsh, C. A.; Greenham, N. C.; Marseglia, E. A.; Friend, R. H.; Moratti, S. C.; Holmes, A. B. Nature 1995, 376, 498– 500. (27) Snaith, H. J.; Whiting, G. L.; Sun, B. Q.; Greenham, N. C.; Huck, W. T. S.; Friend, R. H. Nano Lett. 2005, 5, 1653–1657. (28) Crooker, S. A.; Hollingsworth, J. A.; Tretiak, S.; Klimov, V. I. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2002, 89, 186802. (29) Nedelcu, M.; Lee, J.; Crossland, E. J. W.; Warren, S. C.; Orilall, M. C.; Guldin, S.; Huttner, S.; Ducati, C.; Eder, D.; Wiesner, U.; Steiner, U.; Snaith, H. J. Soft Matter 2009, 5, 134–139. (30) Kersting, R.; Lemmer, U.; Deussen, M.; Bakker, H. J.; Mahrt, R. F.; Kurz, H.; Arkhipov, V. I.; Bassler, H.; Gobel, E. O. Phys. ReV. Lett. 1994, 73, 1440–1443. (31) Westenhoff, S.; Daniel, C.; Friend, R. H.; Silva, C.; Sundstro¨m, V.; Yartsev, A. J. Chem. Phys. 2005, 122, 094903. (32) Scholes, G. D.; Rumbles, G. Nat. Mater. 2006, 5, 683–796. (33) Kersting, R.; Lemmer, U.; Mahrt, R. F.; Leo, K.; Kurz, H.; Ba¨ssler, H.; Gobel, E. O. Phys. ReV. Lett. 1993, 70, 3820–3823. (34) Scholes, G. D. Annu. ReV. Phys. Chem. 2003, 54, 57–87. (35) Meskers, S. C. J.; Hubner, J.; Oestreich, M.; Ba¨ssler, H. Chem. Phys. Lett. 2001, 339, 223–228. (36) Devi, L. S.; Al-Suti, M. K.; Dosche, C.; Khan, M. S.; Friend, R. H.; Kohler, A. Phys. ReV. B 2008, 78, 045210.

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Singlet excitons, triplet excitons, and charges in conjugated materials can in principle react with each other and themselves. These reaction are termed “annihilations” because at least one of the excited species returns to the ground state. Each of these interactions has been reported in single-layer films,6,37-48 but they have so far not been investigated in nanostructured samples. Bimolecular processes that involve singlet excitons are wellstudied, because it is straightforward to probe their photoluminescence and photoinduced absorptions using femtosecond timeresolved spectroscopy. Because of their high diffusivity, singlet excitons annihilate extremely efficiently among themselves in organic semiconductors on picosecond time-scales,6,38,39 and this is a sensitive probe of exciton mobility.49,50 Singlet excitons may also be quenched by charges at high excitation densities.40,41 The measurement of bimolecular processes that only involve “dark” excitations, such as triplets and charges,51 were initially made difficult by ambiguities in the assignment of long-lived photoinduced absorption features.52 Singlet-triplet annihilation has been reported to be significant in polyfluorene thin films,42 but another report on a similar sample concluded exactly the opposite, that this process is insignificant.45 Delayed fluorescence can be used to probe interactions that result in the reformation of singlet excitons, although controversy between the role of charge recombination53 and triplet-triplet annihilation43,44,46,47 exists in the interpretation of delayed fluorescence data. These examples highlight that further studies are necessary, especially in systems where two or more bimolecular processes may be active simultaneously. To comprehensively and quantitatively assess the relative importance of bimolecular interactions in these systems, experimental techniques should be developed, which probe specific reactions selectively. Here, we study the bimolecular interactions of excitations in a binary polyfluorene blend,14,54 with the band-edge offsets of the two blend components optimized for photocurrent generation (37) Ribierre, J. C.; Ruseckas, A.; Knights, K.; Staton, S. V.; Cumpstey, N.; Burn, P. L.; Samuel, I. D. W. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2008, 100, 017402. (38) Nguyen, T. Q.; Martini, I. B.; Liu, J.; Schwartz, B. J. J. Phys. Chem. B 2000, 104, 237–255. (39) Stevens, M. A.; Silva, C.; Russell, D. M.; Friend, R. H. Phys. ReV. B 2001, 63, 165213. (40) Gesquiere, A. J.; Park, S. J.; Barbara, P. F. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 9556–9560. (41) Ferguson, A. J.; Kopidakis, N.; Shaheen, S. E.; Rumbles, G. J. Phys. Chem. C 2008, 112, 9865–9871. (42) Zaushitsyn, Y.; Jespersen, K. G.; Valkunas, L.; Sundstrom, V.; Yartsev, A. Phys. ReV. B 2007, 75, 195201. (43) Rothe, C.; King, S. M.; Monkman, A. P. Phys. ReV. B 2005, 72, 085220. (44) Hertel, D.; Bassler, H.; Guentner, R.; Scherf, U. J. Chem. Phys. 2001, 115, 10007–10013. (45) King, S. M.; Dai, D.; Rothe, C.; Monkman, A. P. Phys. ReV. B 2007, 76, 085204. (46) Partee, J.; Frankevich, E. L.; Uhlhorn, B.; Shinar, J.; Ding, Y.; Barton, T. J. Phys. ReV. Lett. 1999, 82, 3673–3676. (47) Gerhard, A.; Bassler, H. J. Chem. Phys. 2002, 117, 7350–7356. (48) Giebink, N. C.; Sun, Y.; Forrest, S. R. Org. Electron. 2006, 7, 375– 386. (49) Gulbinas, V.; Mineviciute, I.; Hertel, D.; Wellander, R.; Yartsev, A.; Sundstrom, V. J. Chem. Phys. 2007, 127, 144907. (50) Gadermaier, C.; Grasse, F.; Perissinotto, S.; Graf, M.; Galbrecht, F.; Scherf, U.; List, E. J. W.; Lanzani, G. Phys. ReV. B 2008, 78, 045207. (51) Dhoot, A. S.; Greenham, N. C. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2003, 91, 219702. (52) Lin, L. C.; Meng, H. F.; Shy, J. T.; Horng, S. F.; Yu, L. S.; Chen, C. H.; Liaw, H. H.; Huang, C. C.; Peng, K. Y.; Chen, S. A. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2003, 90, 036601. (53) Schweitzer, B.; Arkhipov, V. I.; Scherf, U.; Bassler, H. Chem. Phys. Lett. 1999, 313, 57–62. (54) Arias, A. C.; MacKenzie, J. D.; Stevenson, R.; Halls, J. J. M.; Inbasekaran, M.; Woo, E. P.; Richards, D.; Friend, R. H. Macromolecules 2001, 34, 6005–6013. J. AM. CHEM. SOC.

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(type II heterojunction).55 The samples are a well-studied model system for organic solar cells made of blended conjugated polymers.12,14,54–58 Absorption of light creates singlet excitons, which may undergo a charge-transfer reaction at the interface between the two polymers. The charges may be further separated and transported to the electrodes by diffusion and by weak electric fields, they may recombine, or they may intersystemcross into triplet excitons. The characteristic domain radius of the blend as prepared using chloroform as a solvent is 4.8 nm (ref 57) and is thus expected to strongly confine excitation migration and bimolecular interactions. We report the fluence dependence of time-resolved optical absorption and photoluminescence, and we demonstrate that nongeminate charge recombination is not important in this photovoltaic blend, but that bimolecular annihilations of singlet and triplet excitons by long-lived charge pairs are significant bimolecular decay channels. Surprisingly, we find that triplet-triplet annihilation, which we observed in a single-component film, is completely suppressed in the blend. We conclude that the efficiency of all bimolecular interactions is determined by the nanoscale morphology. 2. Photocycle in the Polyfluorene Blend

In this study, we investigate a 1:1 (by weight) blend of polyfluorene polymers poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-alt-benzothiadiazole) (F8BT) and poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-co-bis-N,N′-(4butylphenyl)-bis-N,N′-phenyl-1,4-phenylene-diamine) (PFB) with molecular weights Mw ) 135 kg/mol and Mw ) 150 kg/mol, respectively (see Figure 1a for chemical structures). The films are spin-cast from chloroform. Our previous investigations of the same blend system have clarified the photocycle of the blend in the absence of bimolecular reactions (see Figure 1b).18,55,57 The primary photoexcitations, singlet excitons, are efficiently split at the heterojunction into interfacial charge pairs within 20 ps.57 The charge pairs (also termed “geminate charge pairs” or “polaron pairs” in the literature)18,59 are immobile, and a subpopulation of them are emissive, with the photoluminescence maximum red-shifted from the exciton emission.55 They may recombine geminately into neutral triplet excitons on F8BT (75%) or directly to the ground state (15%). A minority of charges (10%) becomes spatially separated (SSC) and is longer lived.18 The yield of spatially separated charge pairs correlates well with the internal quantum efficiency measured at shortcircuit conditions.14,60 We note, however, that the internal quantum efficiency can be considerably increased by applying a reverse bias voltage.60 The various second-order interactions that could possibly occur in PFB:F8BT blends during and after excitation are now considered. To clarify this discussion, Figure 1b presents a graphical representation of the population evolution at low (55) Morteani, A. C.; Dhoot, A. S.; Kim, J. S.; Silva, C.; Greenham, N. C.; Murphy, C.; Moons, E.; Cina, S.; Burroughes, J. H.; Friend, R. H. AdV. Mater. 2003, 15, 1708–1712. (56) Morteani, A. C.; Sreearunothai, P.; Herz, L. M.; Friend, R. H.; Silva, C. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2004, 92, 247402. (57) Westenhoff, S.; Howard, I. A.; Friend, R. H. Phys. ReV. Lett. 2008, 101, 016102. (58) Campbell, A. R.; Hodgkiss, J. M.; Westenhoff, S.; Howard, I. A.; Marsh, R. A.; McNeill, C. R.; Friend, R. H.; Greenham, N. C. Nano Lett. 2008, 8, 3942–3947. (59) Huang, Y.-S.; Westenhoff, S.; Avilov, I.; Sreearunothai, P.; Hodgkiss, J. M.; Deleener, C.; Friend, R. H.; Beljonne, D. Nat. Mater. 2008, 7, 483–489. (60) Gonzales-Rabbade, A.; Morteani, A.; Friend, R. H. AdV. Mater. 2009, 21, 3924–3927. 330

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Figure 1. Panel (a) shows the chemical structures of F8BT, PFB, and

[iridium(III) bis(1-(3′-(ω-(4′′′,4′′′,5′′′,5′′′-tetramethyl-1′′,3′′,2′′-dioxaborolan2′′-yl)-oligo[9′′,9′′-dioctylfluorene-alt-benzothiadiazole)phenyl)isoquinolinatoN,C′)(acetyl acetonate)] (F8BT-Ir). Panel (b) indicates how the excitedstate population evolves considering only monomolecular decay channels and following a laser pulse of 600 ps duration; see methods for rate equations. The time-scales for all bimolecular interactions that could occur at high excitation density are sketched. Abbreviations are SCA for singlet exciton-charge annihilation, BCR for nongeminate bimolecular charge recombination, TCA for triplet exciton-charge annihilation, and TTA for triplet exciton-triplet exciton annihilation.

intensity. In our experiments, the pulse length of the excitation laser was 600 ps and had an instantaneous intensity of 2.5 × 105 W/cm2 at the highest energy used. This is 3 orders of magnitude lower than the threshold for singlet-singlet annihilation in F8BT films, which was determined to be 1 × 108 W/cm2.39 Therefore, an exciton will likely create a chargetransfer state before another photon is absorbed in its vicinity, and singlet-singlet annihilation will not occur. A high density of charge-transfer states is created during the excitation pulse, which means that singlet-charge annihilation (SCA) and bimolecular recombination of two interfacial charge pairs (BCR) could occur during the excitation pulse. At intermediate timescales, from 1 to 100 ns, the gradual formation of triplet excitons from interfacial charge pairs leads to an overlap of the charge pair and triplet exciton populations. During this time, triplet excitons may be annihilated by charges (TCA), and bimolecular charge recombination could occur. These bimolecular interactions can be distinguished experimentally, because only the latter would shorten the photoluminescence decay at high excitation densities, which monitors the population of interfacial charge pairs. The former, TCA, could only be observed in the fluence dependence of the transient absorption, because the charge population is not changed. At long time-scales, after 100 ns, the excited-state population is dominated by triplet excitons, with a minor contribution from charges that have become spatially separated. Fluence-dependent transient absorption dynamics would indicate triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA). As illustrated, the fluence dependence of the photoluminescence and induced absorption on the various time ranges (100 ns) will allow individual determination of the various second-order interactions.

Charge Recombination in Conjugated Polymer Blends

Figure 2. Panel (a) shows the normalized time-resolved photoluminescence at 650 nm for the fluences 2.8 × 1012 (black), 2.8 × 1013 (red), and 2.8 × 1014 photons/cm2 (blue). Panel (b) shows the normalized transient absorption at 650 nm probe wavelength for the fluences 2.2 × 1012 (black), 4.7 × 1013 (red), 1.2 × 1014 (blue), and 1.7 × 1014 photons/cm2 (green). Panel (c) shows the transient absorption data for all fluences normalized to their value at 40 ns.

3. Triplet-Charge Annihilation, Absence of Bimolecular Charge Recombination, and Triplet-Triplet Annihilation

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Figure 3. Panel (a) shows the transient absorption of the PFB:F8BT blend at excitation fluences of 8.6 × 1011, 6.9 × 1012, 1.7 × 1013, and 2.1 × 1014 photons/cm2 (black, red, blue, and green symbols, respectively). The global fit described in the text is shown as the lines with the same color code. Panel (b) presents the density of triplets and charges for the highest excitation fluence as extracted from the global fit. On the right axis, the rate of triplet annihilation (triplet-charge annihilation+triplet-triplet annihilation) is shown (red line) for the same fluence.

To extract quantitative information regarding the annihilation processes, we fit the transient absorption signal to a kinetic model. The transient absorption at a given time is: ∆T/T ) (σCT · ([CT] + [SSC]) + σT · [T])lfilm -16

We present the fluence dependence of the time-resolved photoluminescence and the transient induced absorption in Figure 2a and b, respectively. We highlight that we use the same excitation laser (AOT-YVO-25QSPX, Advanced Optical Technologies Ltd.: pulse length 600 ps, λexc ) 355 nm) for both measurements, to ensure identical excitation conditions and enable direct comparison of the fluence dependencies. At the detection wavelength of 650 nm, the photoluminescence is a selective probe of the charge-transfer state population, and its decay rate is independent of excitation density. This implies that bimolecular charge recombination, which would reduce the lifetime of the interfacial charge pairs at high excitation density, does not take place. Figure 2b shows that the decay of the transient absorption signal at 650 nm, which probes a combination of the interfacial charge pair and triplet exciton populations,18 is strongly fluence dependent at the same time-scale. Given we have just observed that the charge-transfer state decay is independent of fluence, this implies that the triplet decay must depend on fluence. In general, triplet-triplet annihilation results in a singlet exciton that should ionize efficiently at the heterojunction and reform a charge-transfer state. Triplet-charge annihilation simply quenches the triplet exciton, and the charge is retained. Thus, the independence of the photoluminescence decay rate on excitation density also implies that interfacial charge pairs are not being reformed as the eventual product of any bimolecular interaction. This suggests that triplet-triplet annihilation is not occurring on this time-scale, because this process would yield a singlet exciton, which would subsequently reform a charge-transfer state. Therefore, we conclude that the second-order kinetics in the 1-100 ns time window are due to triplet-charge annihilation and that triplet-triplet annihilation is negligible. This conclusion is further confirmed by the observation that the transient absorption decay becomes fluence independent after 100 ns (see Figure 2c) when the excited-state population is predominantly triplet excitons.

-16

(1)

where σCT ) 4.3 × 10 cm and σT ) 1.1 × 10 cm are the absorption cross sections of interfacial charge pairs and triplet excitons at 650 nm, respectively,18 [CT] is the chargetransfer state population, [SSC] is the population of spatially separated charge pairs, [T] is the triplet state population, and lfilm is the film thickness (140 nm as measured by profilometry). The decay of the SSC population occurs on a time-scale greater than 1 µs (see long tail in Figure 2c), so it is neglected in this analysis. The population decay of interfacial charge pairs does not depend on fluence, and we therefore model its time dependence as previously described (eqs 1 and 3 in ref 18). The evolution of the triplet population, on the other hand, does depend on fluence and is expressed as 2

2

d[T]/dt ) kCTfT[CT] - kTfGS[T] - γTTA[T]2 - γTCA[T][CT] (2) where kCTfT ) 2.6 × 107 s-1 is the rate of transfer from the charge pairs to the triplet state,18 kTfGS is the monomolecular triplet relaxation rate, γTTA is the bimolecular triplet-triplet annihilation constant, and γTCA is the bimolecular triplet-charge annihilation constant. We note that the direct generation of triplet excitons from singlet excitons is inefficient in this polymer blend and was therefore omitted in eq 2.61 The transient absorption data are globally fit at all fluences (using minimization of least-squares in MATLAB, Mathworks Inc.) by varying the parameters γTTA, γTCA, and kTR to minimize the residual between the observed data and eq 1, which is solved by numerically integrating the population equations. The fit is in good agreement with the data over an order of magnitude in fluence and 3 orders of magnitude in time (see Figure 3a). The extracted parameters (with 90% confidence bounds shown in brackets) are: kTfGS ) 9.8 × 105 s-1 ((9.7-10) × 105 s-1), γTTA ) 1 × 10-15 cm3/s ((0-2) × 10-15 cm3/s), and γTCA ) (61) Ford, T. A.; Avilov, I.; Beljonne, D.; Greenham, N. C. Phys. ReV. B 2005, 71, 125212. J. AM. CHEM. SOC.

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5.6 × 10-12 cm3/s ((5.3-5.8) × 10-12 cm3/s). The monomolecular triplet decay rate (kTfGS) agrees well with previous measurements.62 To visualize these results, Figure 3b presents the charge and triplet populations together with the total rate of triplet annihilation, which is the sum of charge-triplet and triplet-triplet annihilations. This analysis confirms our qualitative analysis, in that triplet-charge annihilation is much more significant than triplet-triplet annihilation. 4. Triplet-Triplet Annihilation in Pristine Films of F8BT-Ir

The lack of triplet-triplet annihilation is surprising given that it can be so significant in single-component films of pristine conjugated polymers.44,48 Indeed, triplet-triplet annihilation has been studied on millisecond time-scales over a range of temperatures